THE HARDWOOD RECORD. 



1 8c 



John X. \"cr(liii. St. I.ouis, Mo. 



E. H. Hill. Halk'tt Lumber Conn;]ai)y, 

 St. Louis, Mo. 



John H. Himmelbcrger, Himmelbevsi, 

 ■& Harrison Company, Morehead, Mo. 

 Harry E. Christian, Indianapolis. Ind. 

 O. P. Hurd, Jr., Cincinnati, O. 

 L. Methudy. St. Louis, Mo. 



F. E. Stonebraker, L. H. Gage Lumber 

 ■Company, Providence, R. I. 



J. B. Temple, J. A. Fay & Egan Com- 

 pany, St Louis, Mo. 



Maurice M. Wall, Bnlfalo Hardwood 

 Lumber Company, Buffalo, N. Y. 



B. F. Swain, LI'Heur & Swain Lumber 

 Company, Seymour, Ind. 



A. E. Hart, Leland G. Banning, Cincin- 

 nati, O. 



Ben.i. F. Cobb, the Lumber Keview, Chi- 

 cago, 111. 



Geo. R. Thamer, Empire Lumber Com- 

 pany, Chicago. 



Wm. J. Wagstaff, Oshkosh, Wis. 



Edward J. Yo<ing, American Hardwood 

 Lumber Company, Madison, Wis. 



H. C. Humphrey, G. W. Jones Lumber 

 ■Company, Appleton, Wis. 



Chas. H. Barnaby. Greencastle. Ind. 



C. G. Powell, FuIIerton-Powell Hard- 

 wood Lumber Company, South Bend, Ind. 



Hamilton Love, Love, Boyd & Co., Nash- 

 ville, Tenn. 



T. J. Christian, the FuUerton-Powell 

 Hardwood Lumljer Company, Ind. 



Theodore Plummer, Plummer-Benedict 

 Lumber Company, St. Louis, Mo. 



Alex Lendium, PciumkI Walnut Corpora- 

 tion, Kansas City, Mo. 



John W. Long. Xew York Lumber Trade 

 Join-nal, New Y'ork. 



John E. Williams, the Lumbo' Trade 

 Journal, New Orleans. L.-i. 



S. L. Dodds, Sunflower Lumber -Com- 

 pany, Clarksdale, Miss. 



Sam K. Cowan, Southern Lumlierman, 

 Nashville, Tenn. 



AV. E. Smith, Three States Lumber Com- 

 pany, Cairo, 111. 



W. E. Barns, St. Louis Lumberman, St. 

 Louis, Mo. 



C. V. Kimball, Hardwood Record, Chi- 

 cago. 



James Buckley, Brookville, Ind. 



M. B. Farrin, JI. P.. Fanin Lun.licr Com- 

 pany, Cincinnati. 



Nat Williams, Yowell & Williams, Little 

 Rock, Ark. 



W. W. Knight, Long-Knight Lumbar 

 Company, Indianapolis. Ind. 



S. M. Niekey, A. B. Nickey & Sons, 

 Princeton, Ind. 



W. E. Nickey, A. B. Nickey &- Sons, 

 Princeton, Ind. 



H. H. Connelly, Connelly Hardv.ood 

 Lumber Company. Kansas City. Mo. 



B. W. Stadden. Lumbermen's Credit As- 

 sociation, Chicago. 



Harry C. Jackson, the Michigan .Maple 

 Company, Grand Rapids. Mich. 



Wm. Kramer, C. & W. Kramer, Rich- 

 mond, Ind. 



r. Benson, James Kennedy &: Co., Ft. 

 Wayne, Ind. 



F. M. Possell, (Jage .V Pi ssell. Cairo. 

 Ind. 



E. A. Swain, Bennett & Witte. Cincin- 

 nati, O. 



R. S. Robertson, Ferguson-Palmer Com- 

 liany, Padueah, Ky. 



John A. Byers. the S. T. Dering Hard- 

 wood Lumber Company, Petersburg, Ind. 



S, T. Dering, the S. T. Dering Hardwood 

 Lumber Company, Petersburg, Ind. 



J. P. Steffy, Steffy Lumber Compan.v, 

 Rarville, La. 



Alcee Stewart, Alcee Stewart & Co., St. 

 Louis. 



J. W. Darling, the J. W. Darling Lum- 

 ber Company. Cincinnati. 



E. K. I'rickett, the Globc-Wcrnicke 

 Company, Cincinnati. 



G. D. Fellows, G. D Fellows Lumber 

 Company, Racine, Wis. 



F. II. Smith, F. H. Smith Lumber Com- 

 pany, ,St. Louis. 



W. .V. Bennett, Bennett & Witte, Cincin- 

 I'.ati. O. 



W. J, Cude, Kimmins, Tenn. 



C. B. Kelley, C. B. Kelley Lumber Com- 

 pany, Chicago. 



S. D. Pine, American Lumberman, Chi- 

 cago. 



Leonard Bronson, American Lumberman. 

 Chicago. 



B. A. Johnson, American Lumberman, 

 Chicago. 



D. C. Burgo.yne, Paris, Tex. 



W. H. White, W. H. White & Co., Boyiie 

 City, Mich. 



J. A. Thompson, May, Thompson & 

 Tliayer, Evansville, Ind. 



Jacob Mahley, Sullivan. Ind. 



Daniel Wertz, Maley & Wertz. Bvans- 

 yille, Ind. 



O. W. Gladden, Gladden Lumber Com- 

 pany, Indianapolis, Ind. 



J. A. Braun, C. E. Strifler Lumber Com- 

 pany, St. Louis, Mo. 



M. E. Thomas, Cobbs & MHchell, Inc., 

 Cadillac, Mich. 



A. R. Vinnedge, Vinnedge Bros., Chicago, 



E. E. Goodlander, Goodlander-Robertsoii 

 Lumber Company, Memphis, Tenn. 



J. P. Richardson, St. Louis, Mo, 



J. S. Garetson, Garetson-Greason Lum- 

 ber Company, St. Louis, Mo. 



Edw. C. Allen, Cairo, 111. 



H. S. Candee, Hardwood Export Com- 

 pany, Cairo, HI. 



N. A. Gladding, E. C. Atkins & Co., In- 

 dianapolis, Ind. 



Col. Thos. K. Edwards, Illinois Central 

 Railroad, Chicago. 



F. F. Fish, Foster Lumber Mercantile 

 Agency, Chicago. 



C. F. Liebke. C. F. Liebke Haixlwood 

 Lumber Company, St. Louis. JIo. 



Geo. H. Leuhrmann. C. F. Leuhrmann 

 Hardwood Lumber Company, St. Louis, 

 Mo. 



F. W. Lawi-ence, Lawrence & Wiggin. 

 Boston, Mas.s. 



TRAIN RAN 180 MILES IN 180 

 MINUTES. 



Springfield, 111., April 10.— The "Continen- 

 tal Limited" on the Wabash Railroad has 

 made a new record from Tilton to Granite 

 City, making 180 miles in ISO minutes. 



IMPROVED TRIPLE CYLINDER 

 PLANER. 



The cut herewith shown represents a 

 new planer just introduced on the mar- 

 ket by the well-known makers of pat- 

 ented wood-working machinery, J. A. Fay 

 & Egan Company of No. 414 to 434 West 

 Front street, Cincinnati, Ohio. It was 

 patented December 19, 1809, and Febru- 

 ary G, 1900, and is called their new No. 

 14 triple cylinder surfacer. It is especially 

 designed and built to meet the requirements 

 of the Pacific coast and southern lumber- 

 men, and also for large box factories, for 

 %vhich industries the makers claim it will 

 do the work in a very fine and economical 

 manner. 



Among its most importJint points we In- 

 vite special attention to the following: 



It has a large capacity for either light 

 or heavy surfacing, and will plane both 

 sides up to 30 inches wide and 12 inches 

 thick, on either hard or soft wood. The 

 cylinders are slotted for carrying three 

 knives. 



The feed is six powerfully driven rolls, 

 all having parallel lift to give full bear- 

 ing acro.ss entire surface of the stock. The 

 feed is powerful, steady and uniform, can 

 be furnished with any speed desired, and 

 is under instant eonti-ol of the operator. 

 The, two upper rolls before the cylin- 

 der are divided, each section being cen- 

 ter geared and separately driven and 

 weighted, while the lower rolls are driven 

 by heavy expansion gearing. The lon-er 

 cylinder and the receiving plate after 

 same draw out for shaiijening or reset- 

 ting the knives. 



The pressure bar after the upper cylin- 

 der acts as a bar over the lower cylin- 

 der, and is adjusted by means of small 

 hand wheel at the side of the machine, thus 

 avoiding separate adjustment The bed 

 is easily raised or lowered automatically 

 or by hand, and has friction rolls at each 

 end. The lower cylinder is arranged for 

 regulating depth of cut. 



Further pai-ticulars, cuts and terms will 

 be willingly furnished by the manufac- 



NO. U NEW TRIPLE 

 This was with five stops— three station 

 stoi3s, one to change engines and one to 

 take on coal. The actual running time 

 was two hours and thirty-eight minutes. 

 The run from Danville to Decatur, 71,6 

 miles, was made in TO minutes, including 

 stops at Tolono and Bement.— St. Louis 

 Republic, April 17, 1902. 



CYLINDER PLANER. 



turers to those applying for same. Their 

 colored poster, showing one hundred of 

 their machines, is free. 



Messrs. W. R. Brehmer and Louis Solz- 

 mann of Wausau, Wis., will erect a saw 

 mill at Weston, a -small town near by. 

 which will have a capacity of 35,000 feet 

 per day. 



